Your tenses don’t need to be perfect.
You have been told your tenses must be correct.
They don’t.
It’s fine to get them wrong sometimes. Or even a lot of the time.
In 25 years of coaching, I have never seen someone lose a deal, a promotion or a room because they used the present simple instead of the present continuous.
I have seen people lose their train of thought – mid-sentence – because they stopped to worry about it.
The tense is not the problem. The hesitation is.
Quick win: Next time you freeze over a tense – choose one and keep speaking. The meaning will arrive. It almost always does.
💬 How much time have you spent worrying about tenses?
— Christine


0 Comments